What’s New On Shudder June 2017: ‘Cathy’s Curse,’ ‘Among The Living,’ ‘Child Eater,’ And More

Horror fans looking for a good scare this June need look no further than Shudder’s upcoming additions! The streaming service’s new films include classics like 1977’s Cathy’s Curse, which reveals what happens when a teen gets possessed by the spirit of her long dead aunt. Kids are at the center of another horror film coming to Shudder in June: Iceland’s Child Eater. There’s plenty for casual and hardcore horror fans alike to find on Shudder in June.

For the low price of just $4.99 a month, Shudder will grant you access to all the horror hits and blood-curdling indie gems you can handle. Halloween may be in October, but June can be filled with plenty of frights too! Especially if you check out all the new horror titles now available to stream on Shudder!

Available June 1

Noroi: The Curse (2005)

One of three new movies exclusive to Shudder this June, Noroi: The Curse first terrified Japanese audiences more than ten years ago. The found footage film comes from the golden age of Japanese horror, an era that also spawned international hit franchises like The Ring and The Grudge. Noroi actually comes from the director behind the Ring/Grudge mash-up film Sadako Vs. Kayako.

Beyond the Darkness (1979)Cathy’s Curse (1977)Emmanuelle and the Last Cannibals (1977)

Available June 12

The Puppet Man (2016)I Want You Inside Me (2016)The Treatment (2014)

Available June 15

Among The Living (2014)

France’s Among the Living will make its United States debut on June 15 when it arrives on Shudder. The terrifying coming of age film follows a trio of teens who discover that their hometown has a horrifying secret. Things get scary—and bloody—from there. Like Noroi: The Curse, Among the Living is another Shudder exclusive.

The third Shudder exclusive for June, Show Pieces will definitely be of interest to comic book fans. The noir-tinged horror anthology comes from legendary comic writer Alan Moore, the man responsible for iconic tales like Watchmen, V For vendetta and League of Extraordinary Gentlemen. The film marks the first time that Moore’s written something for the screen as opposed to the page, and you’ll be able to see it on Shudder later this month.